Twitter is simply swarming with users who gripe about their lives, friends, celebrities and jobs. Heck, some even make great money doing it — safely, from behind the veil of an anonymousaccount.

In 2015, it doesn't take a rocket scientist to figure out how "public" tweets can be (even when they're "private,") how fast they're able to spread (even if you've only got 10 followers,) or how long they'll stick around (even after they've been deleted.)

This week's viral Twitter blunder story involves a member of the latter group mentioned in the paragraph above; a teen girl from Texas whose profane tweet about starting a new job got her fired — before she'd even walked in the door.

Waple's Twitter account has since been wiped of all tweets, but screenshots posted around the web reveal that the pizza shop boss had been sent a photo of Cella's tweet by one of her new, (almost) co-workers.

During his brief "stirring up drama on Twitter" spree, Waple also said this to another user who had asked what Cella would have been doing at Jet's pizza if she hadn't been fired:

Because the internet simply adores this kind of story, Cella's tweets spread fast and far, garnering the young woman attention from media outlets around the world.

The North Texas teen seems to be quite happy with her newfound (albeit most-definitely fleeting) notoriety, as evidenced by her Twitter feed — which is now filled with thousands of retweets mentioning her digital blunder.

Naturally, there are many around the web who are chastising Cella for a) tweeting her way out of a job, and b) Bragging about cheating her way out of a job, but we're betting you can guess most of what those people said.

Will Cella's story prompt some teens to think more carefully about what they publish online, or will the fact that she's gaining an international audience for being fired over Twitter just encourage some to follow suit? Likely, a bit of both — though only time will tell.